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Awareness is in the eye of the observer: Preserved third-person awareness of deficit in anosognosia for hemiplegia.
Besharati, Sahba; Jenkinson, Paul M; Kopelman, Michael; Solms, Mark; Moro, Valentina; Fotopoulou, Aikaterini.
Affiliation
  • Besharati S; Department of Psychology, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa; CIFAR Azrieli Global Scholars Program, CIFAR, Toronto, Canada. Electronic address: sahba@besharati.com.
  • Jenkinson PM; Institute for Social Neuroscience, Melbourne, Australia.
  • Kopelman M; Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK.
  • Solms M; Neuroscience Institute, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
  • Moro V; Department of Human Sciences, University of Verona, Italy; IRCSS Sacro Cuore Don Calabria, Negrar, Verona, Italy.
  • Fotopoulou A; Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Heath Psychology, University College London, UK.
Neuropsychologia ; 170: 108227, 2022 06 06.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35364093
In recent decades, the research traditions of (first-person) embodied cognition and of (third-person) social cognition have approached the study of self-awareness with relative independence. However, neurological disorders of self-awareness offer a unifying perspective to empirically investigate the contribution of embodiment and social cognition to self-awareness. This study focused on a neuropsychological disorder of bodily self-awareness following right-hemisphere damage, namely anosognosia for hemiplegia (AHP). A previous neuropsychological study has shown AHP patients, relative to neurological controls, to have a specific deficit in third-person perspective taking and allocentric stance (the other unrelated to the self) in higher order mentalizing tasks. However, no study has tested if verbal awareness of motor deficits is influenced by perspective-taking and centrism and identified the related anatomical correlates. Accordingly, two novel experiments were conducted with right-hemisphere stroke patients with (n = 17) and without AHP (n = 17) that targeted either their own (egocentric, experiment 1) or another stooge patients (allocentric, experiment 2) motor abilities from a first-or-third person perspective. In both experiments, neurological controls showed no significant difference in perspective-taking, suggesting that social cognition is not a necessary consequence of right-hemisphere damage. More specifically, experiment 1 found AHP patients more aware of their own motor paralysis (egocentric stance) when asked from a third compared to a first-person perspective, using both group level and individual level analysis. In experiment 2, AHP patients were less accurate than controls in making allocentric judgements about the stooge patient, but with only a trend towards significance and with no difference between perspectives. As predicted, deficits in egocentric and allocentric third-person perspective taking were associated with lesions in the middle frontal gyrus, superior temporal and supramarginal gyri, and white matter disconnections were more prominent with deficits in allocentricity. Behavioural and neuroimaging results demonstrate the intersecting relationship between bodily self-awareness and self-and-other-directed metacognition or mentalisation.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Stroke / Agnosia / Metacognition Type of study: Etiology_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Neuropsychologia Year: 2022 Document type: Article Country of publication: United kingdom

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Stroke / Agnosia / Metacognition Type of study: Etiology_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Neuropsychologia Year: 2022 Document type: Article Country of publication: United kingdom